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At the request of the Collegiate Commissioners Association, the Division I Council directed the Division I Committee on Student-Athlete Reinstatement and Legislative Committee to reexamine the legislation and application of reinstatement guidelines for student-athletes who engage in sports wagering.
The current reinstatement guidelines were recently reviewed by the council and Legislative Committee following modifications made by the reinstatement committee in May. The commissioners requested the review of guidelines after recent outcomes in reinstatement cases — involving wagering violations that have yielded permanent or long-term ineligibility for student-athletes — to ensure that NCAA members think penalties reflect the current wagering environment.
"We continue to put student-athlete well-being front and center in the Association's efforts around sports wagering, including this week's action related to reconsideration of penalties that members believe have been overly punitive to student-athletes," NCAA President Charlie Baker said. "This is an important step toward modernizing the NCAA's approach to sports wagering. Included in that updated approach is our plan to advocate through state and federal legislators to reduce harassment of young people from bettors and to increase education efforts to help prevent problem gambling in the student population."
Specifically, the committees will review penalties for student-athletes who participate in sports wagering, but not on their own teams. The council reaffirmed that significant penalties continue to be appropriate for wagering behaviors that potentially compromise the integrity of contests, including wagering on a student-athlete's own team. The Committee on Student-Athlete Reinstatement is expected to complete its review and finalize recommendations by mid-October, with a final Council Coordination Committee vote on updated guidelines to occur at the end of October. The guidelines potentially could be applied retroactively.
Draft concepts under consideration include:
- On a first offense, eliminate penalties that result in student-athletes being withheld from competition — regardless of the dollar value of the wagers and including bets placed on other sports at a student-athlete's school — and require education on sports wagering rules and prevention.
- On a second offense, potentially involve withholding penalties, depending on the dollar value of the bet(s) in question.
- On a third or subsequent offense, resulting penalty could be a loss of one full season of eligibility.
In May, the NCAA released the results of a survey that examined gambling behaviors of the general college student population. Results indicated 16% of the population engaged in at least one risky wagering behavior, and at least 70% of gamblers exhibiting risky behavior think consistent wagering will improve their earnings.
To date, the NCAA has partnered with EPIC Risk Management to reach more than 20,000 student-athletes, coaches and administrators through education efforts — the largest program of its kind globally. In addition to educational efforts for game officials, the NCAA is aligning an enhanced background check program with higher-risk sports as identified by a periodic sports wagering risk assessment.
Additionally, the NCAA announced Wednesday it will begin working with state and federal lawmakers to address harassment that student-athletes are receiving from bettors online.